VaultMarq26 wrote:I have always started 2 height below my PR...so about a foot below.....that way you get one easy height.....one height that is relativly easy but you can't just go through the motions, a jump at your PR (or a couple inches below it depending on what height the starting was) where you need to put it all together, then you have only had 4 or 5 jumps before attempting a new height.
At the highest level it is probably 4-5 jumps, where 4th or 5th is for your PR, WR or other records.
At the level where only 3-4 jumpers remain there is not enough time to recover for 8-9 jumps, even with 4-6 min between. You have to use tricks with officials to increase the time.
Let’s say you open at 5.70 – 5.85 – WIN – Record. If you take 3 jumps on 5.70 it would be very hard to get the record and difficult to win in real competitions.
The idea that a vaulter should use several attempts to adjust to the conditions and other variables is detrimental for winning in modern competitions. A vaulter should perform at the highest level from the first jump and the reason a vaulter that wishes to clear 6m in the competition would start at 5.70 is simple. 30cm or a foot is enough slack to adjust the run up on the first height, then a Win on the second or a third height and the record on the fourth. Imagine the progression with 5.50. Sure one can win but what about 6m? What about 6.15m with 5.50 opening? See the picture!